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Archive for Heather Ross

Sweet Baby James

By Liz · Comments (10) · February 22nd, 2013

Different quilts start in different places for me. Sometimes it starts with a color scheme or a stack of fabrics. Sometimes a design or a shape I’d like to make. Sometimes the whole thing seems to pop up almost fully-formed in my head, waiting to be executed.

Sweet Baby James - closeup

This one started with the fabrics. Specifically, some of my long-hoarded, out-of-print Heather Ross fabrics, which were desperately waiting for just the right little boy. Almost directly from one of the Heather Ross prints, I was in love with the combination of aqua/sky, navy blue, and a reddish orange – no brown. Boyish without being TRUCKS AND PIRATES AND ALIENS, and appropriately preppy for the son of a pair of Manhattan lawyers.

On the cutting mat this morning.

The only question was – what to do with it all? I hit up my Pinterest boards, looking for something that would be quick and relatively simple, but not too boring. The one that jumped out at me was the Reunion Quilt from That girl… That quilt. So lovely! Simple patchwork made just a bit more interesting with some hourglass blocks thrown in.

Sweet Baby James

Needless to say, this came together quickly, and I am so, so happy with how all of the fabrics work together. The solids in the half-square triangle and hourglass blocks, in case you’re wondering, are Kona Aqua, Tangerine, and Nightfall, with Snow.

Sweet Baby James - back

The back is a polka dot I bought ages ago at Joann’s, as though it were always meant for this project. To bring it up to size, I added some more Nightfall and Tangerine (not easy colors to photograph, especially indoors in the winter!), as well as the light blue Lizzy House XO print.

Sweet Baby James - back closeup

I didn’t realize until I went back to link to the inspiration quilt how close to exactly the same quilting I did on mine. Whoops! I started out quilting either side of the horizontal seams, and then went back and quilted diagonally, every third block. So the whole thing has stayed nice and soft and minimally quilted, but I like that some of the squares have a diagonal or an X through them.

Sweet Baby James - folded

The binding is even more hoarded Heather Ross – a stripe from Lightning Bugs and Other Mysteries that I randomly scored a few years ago at my first Boston Modern Quilt Guild meeting.

So, off this quilt has flown to New York, to hopefully be loved and used and abused by Lucy‘s new little brother, James. Hope you love it, sweet boy! (And your mama, too.)

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Comments (10)
Categories : Finished Objects
Tags : aqua, baby boy, baby quilt, half-square triangles, Heather Ross, hourglass, Lightning Bugs and Other Mysteries, navy, orange, patchwork

A Purple Unicorn Scarf

By Liz · Comments (3) · October 27th, 2011

I don’t know exactly where my 4-year-old daughter got the idea, but one of her recent fixations is asking me to sew her a scarf.

Really? I mean, when I think scarves, I think yarn. Not fabric. I kind of nodded vaguely, but she kept asking.

Well, wouldn’t you know, Jeni of In Color Order posted a quick scarf tutorial, as though she somehow knew that a preschooler was in seemingly desperate need of a new scarf.  I barely had time to bookmark it before Becca asked me again.  In an attempt to put her off for another day or two, I asked if she wanted pom-poms on her scarf (therefore requiring a trip to Joann’s). Nope. “Just regular.”

Alright, fine. Off we went to the fabric bins, since I have a few fat eighths of voile just hanging around without a purpose.  Instead, she saw some of the Far Far Away double gauze left over from her quilt, and instantly requested a purple unicorn scarf.

The Purple Unicorn Scarf

About 20 minutes later, it was done.

The Purple Unicorn Scarf

I think she likes it. Score one for Mom.

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Comments (3)
Categories : Crafts, Finished Objects
Tags : double gauze, Far Far Away, Heather Ross, scarf

Fabric lovers do weird things

By Liz · Comments (13) · October 20th, 2011

I haven’t done a ton of impulse-buying fabric this year. Oh sure, there was my Sewing Summit haul, and a few other random purchases. But I really have been trying to use my stash this year, and most of my purchases were made with a specific purpose.

And then, one morning, I got an email from zulily. What was one of the specials of the day? Munki Munki pajamas. With barely a thought, I snatched some up.

munki munki pajamas

There were some flannel pants with green gnomes that are so delicious they’ve gone straight to my pajama drawer. But as for the rest, I am conflicted.  Do I wear them, in their soft and comfy glory, proud fabric geek that I am? Or do I pull out my seam ripper and put them into my fabric stash?

My husband just looks at me and shakes his head. “You bought pajamas just to rip them apart for the fabric? Seriously?” Yes. Seriously.

For the record, they’re all XL (ahem, it’s my size, whatever). The top two (buses and pink gnomes) are spaghetti-strap nightgowns, which are really not my style, anyways.  The fish in bags are pajama pants. And I do technically already have some of those fish in my stash…

Fabric fiends friends, what would you do?

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Comments (13)
Categories : Fabric
Tags : Heather Ross, munki munki pajamas

Raspberry Lemonade

By Liz · Comments (9) · July 14th, 2011

Would you believe it? A finished quilt! It’s a miracle! As is the fact that my two almost-4-year-olds were cooperative enough to hold it while I took pictures.

Raspberry Lemonade

Of course, I started this one before Ellie was born. The fabrics, in fact, were largely from the first stack I pulled for Ellie and then changed my mind, but I’m glad I didn’t abandon the idea entirely. I was hoping to have it ready to go when the lovely Miss Quinn was born, but alas, she is already two months old. I suppose having my own high-needs newborn is a good excuse, huh?

Raspberry Lemonade

The design is quite simple: 6×3″ (finished) bricks of prints, with 3×3″ squares of white. I experienced some degree of doubt when I was working on it, but as it got closer to finished, I found I really loved it.

Raspberry Lemonade

I knew even before I cut the fabric for the front that I would use this pink/fuschia/yellow dot from Lightning Bugs as the binding. You could say the entire quilt was inspired from the binding. A little backwards, perhaps, but it’s such a delicious color combination.

Raspberry Lemonade

As for the back, I knew I wanted to use big pieces of solid pink/fuschia/yellow, as well as some scraps from the front, but couldn’t quite decide how to put them together. So I popped over to the Quilt Backs group on Flickr, and found my inspiration from the delightful Patch Andi.

Raspberry Lemonade

For the quilting, I wanted to keep it minimal. This quilt has so much delicious Heather Ross fabric, I wanted to keep the whole thing really soft. The quilting is just straight diagonal lines, every 6 inches. I love that it has the effect of looking a little random against the rectangular bricks on the front, since only some of the white blocks have an “X” and it goes through only one half of the bricks.

Raspberry Lemonade

Off it has gone to Virginia, hopefully to be enjoyed by sweet Quinn (and her parents, dear friends who stood up at our wedding) as she stakes out space for a girl in a home of two big brothers.

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Comments (9)
Categories : Finished Objects
Tags : baby, bricks, fuschia, gift, Heather Ross, Lightning Bugs and Other Mysteries, mendocino, pink, white, yellow

Only the best for my baby

By Liz · Comments (10) · October 20th, 2010

I had my big ultrasound last Friday and everything looked good with the wee new baby-to-be. To my surprise (and frustration), the ultrasound tech pronounced herself “75-80% sure” it’s a girl.  Surprise, because I was thoroughly convinced it was going to be a boy, as was the rest of my family.  Frustration, because I do NOT care for 20% uncertainty, whether boy OR girl!  It’s making me a little gun-shy on proclaiming things for one gender or the other, but I decided to just go for it and pull fabrics.

Fabric, pulled

Oh, that’s right. I pulled out almost my entire hoarded stash of Heather Ross (not counting Far Far Away, that’s her sister’s quilt).  It’s mostly Mendocino with a bit of Lightning Bugs thrown in.  I only took out the orange/blue/brown dots and stripes and the blue dogs.  All of the pink and fishy prints stayed in.

I may have even found inspiration this morning on what to do with it.  From Ashley, of course.

What do you think? Take any of the prints out? (Looking at the stack, I wonder if I need to pull that dark purple, or find another one to add.) Add solids? Leave it as is?  Any other quilt design you’d do?  I haven’t cut anything yet…

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Comments (10)
Categories : Fabric
Tags : Heather Ross, mendocino

The Bean

By Liz · Comments (16) · June 14th, 2010

For some reason, I had it in my head when she was really little that my daughter would be a tomboy.  She was very spunky and clever and agile at a young age. I didn’t put her in many dresses and ruffles, and I absolutely refused to put any of those ridiculous headbands on her little peach-fuzzed head.  I even dressed her as a ninja for her first (technically, second) Halloween. Trust me, it was fitting.

And yet I got ticked off if people asked me if she was a boy.  Yeah, I get it now.

Anyways, somewhere along the line, she decided she loved butterflies and “spinning” dresses and anything involving “beautiful colors.” Most specifically, pink and purple. What can I say?

I knew that Far, Far Away was for her.  And, thankfully, she loves finding the unicorns and snails and frogs in the different blocks.  She’s been pestering me for ages, any time she sees me sewing.  “Mama, are you making my quilt?”  Yes, my dear.  Yes. It’s finally done.

Becca's Big-Girl Quilt

The double gauze is a little tricky to work with. It really wants to distort in shape and fray a lot, so I handled it really gingerly and breathed a little easier once each piece was enclosed in a ring of Kona.  I used ten different solids for borders: violet, periwinkle, petal, lime, cactus, amber, peach, carnation, salmon, and melon.  Part of me thinks it was too busy, that I shouldn’t have used that many colors.  And maybe if I was making it for someone a little older, or as a lap quilt for my house, maybe it would have looked a little classier if I had toned it down. But somehow I think all the different colors work well for a little girl’s quilt.

Becca's Big-Girl Quilt

Sashing is Kona Cerise, which I am completely in love with.  It’s such a great, bold raspberry color.  Rebecca is tickled because she can’t quite decide if she should call it pink or purple.

Becca's Big-Girl Quilt

The back is mostly Kona Petal, which is a very pretty shade of pink that has a hint of purple to it as well.  I quilted it in my favorite loopy stipple, except I did a double-loop instead of a single one.  I saw Amanda Jean do it once, and I agree with her that it’s somehow a little fancier or more girly or frilly or something. But still playful.  And FAST!  There’s something about the motion of the loops instead of a “standard” stipple that feels so natural. I did the whole thing in a single sitting.

Becca's Big-Girl Quilt

The binding is Kona Cactus. I saw several other Far, Far Away quilts with the cerise and a kind of lime-green contrast, and thought it was so perfect.  Looking at the other solids I used, I didn’t want to do another shade of pink for the binding. I wanted some contrast, but the blues weren’t doing it for me.  Green was bright and it popped, a little something different and interesting. I love it.

Becca's Big-Girl Quilt

But nothing beats my sweet, sweet girl who bounced up and down when she saw it was finished.  “Mama! Is it done?!”  She immediately pulled it upstairs to put on her new bed.  Two nights later, as she cuddled up for our song before bed, she said out of nowhere, “thank you for my unicorn quilt, Mommy.”  You’re welcome, my Becca Bean.  You’re welcome.

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Comments (16)
Categories : Finished Objects
Tags : Far Far Away, Heather Ross, Kona solids, toddler bed quilts

Fraternal

By Liz · Comments (13) · June 13th, 2010

You’d be amazed how often people ask me if my boy/girl twins are identical.  Apparently no one was paying attention in high school biology.**

Fraternal Quilts

Being a mom of twins has, to state the obvious, shaped my parental world-view in countless ways. One notable thing is that everything in my world comes in pairs.  I never pour a single cup of juice or get a single snack from the pantry.  I always ask if there’s a “twin discount” when I’m buying two big-ticket items, like carseats or cribs.  Most recently, we bought a pair of toddler beds and moved my big kids into their own rooms and big beds.

Having two kids of the exact same age makes me a little obsessed with keeping everything “equal.” I don’t want them to always have two of the exact same thing (though sometimes that’s the easiest way), since they’re two very different little people with different interests.  But we do try to keep things fairly equitable.

Fraternal Quilts

And, so, you’ll notice that my kids’ new quilts are indeed very similar, but hardly identical.  They are both made of 8″ blocks with 3″ sashing and 5″ borders.  Lots of solids, including the binding. Similar strip of blocks on the back.  The layout, the structure is the same.  And yet, the actual quilts have very different looks and personalities.  Both suited to their recipients.

I’ll give them each their own post in the next two days.  Much like my beloved kiddos, they are certainly their own individual quilts.  And yet, I cannot ignore the fact that they are, and always will be, a pair.

——–

** OK, here’s your mini biology lesson for the day, in case you want to actually know the difference between identical and fraternal twins.

IDENTICAL or MONOZYGOTIC twins occur when a single fertilized egg splits in half, generally in the first couple of days after fertilization.  Therefore, the two resulting babies have the exact same DNA.  Having the same DNA means they will be the same sex and will likely be almost impossible to tell apart to the casual observer (barring things like different haircuts and the like, of course). Boy/girl twins, therefore, cannot be identical. (No matter what the crazy lady at the grocery store tells me. There is also not, as she would have liked to believe, such a thing as “almost identical.”  WHAT?) Identical twinning is a random occurrence, and there is no scientific evidence of it “running in families.”  It just happens.

FRATERNAL or DIZYGOTIC twins occur when two separate eggs are individually fertilized.  When they occur spontaneously (i.e. without fertility treatments), it means the mother has ovulated more than one egg in a single cycle (or, as I like to say, “double-dropped”).  The resulting babies are no more genetically alike than any other pair of siblings, and can be same- or different-gender.  Because they are the result of multiple-ovulation, fraternal twins can and do sometimes run in families, as the mother might have a genetic pre-disposition to double-dropping.  But, as you can now tell, it only matters if there is a history of twins on the woman’s side of the family, as the man obviously has no influence on how many eggs she’s going to drop.  So it does not matter in the slightest whether or not there are twins on my husband’s side of the family (there aren’t, but everyone likes to ask). There are other factors that can give a woman a higher risk of multiple-ovulation, even if there is no family history.

Sorry, I couldn’t resist this mini rant. As you might imagine, we twin moms get a lot of very strange comments.

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Comments (13)
Categories : Finished Objects
Tags : erin michael, Far Far Away, goodnight monkey, Heather Ross, moda, toddler bed quilts, twins, wonky nine-patch

A quilt guild meeting, and other mysteries

By Liz · Comments (8) · April 5th, 2010

This Saturday, I went to my first meeting with the New England Modern Quilt Guild. It was at Peggy Anne’s quilt shop in Concord, New Hampshire, and it was lovely to meet a bunch of like-minded modern fabric freaks.

I have to say, it was also a funny change of pace for me. Much unlike the other quilt guild I belong to, I was not the youngest person in the room by a margin of at least 20 years.  In fact, I was somewhere in the middle. Refreshing!

Anyways, after getting some business out of the way, we ooh-ed and ahh-ed our way through Peggy Anne’s shop.  And made some delightful discoveries.

These, for instance:

SCORE! Out-of-print Heather Ross!

Oh, hello there, out-of-print Heather Ross!  The fat quarter shelves had some orange wildflowers and orange-and-blue stripes, and she had more than a BOLT of the stripes in a darker orange/red colorway.  Three fat quarters and a yard and a half of the other stripe later, I left.

An hour later, I got home and realized I left my (much beloved and rather pricey) camera at the shop.  Which was closing for the day.  And not open on Sundays.  So today, with kids in tow, we drove all the way back up to Concord.

I’m apparently training the kids well, because we went inside and they asked if they could get some fabric. HA!  Peggy Anne was a doll and let them each pick their own fat quarter, no charge!  Isn’t she sweet?  And, OK, the fabrics they chose were kind of ugly, but whatever.

Daniel at Peggy Anne's

And then, I remembered that she said something on Saturday about quilt kits being 20% off.  Well, I’m not really a big fan of quilt kits. I’d much rather pick my own fabrics, obviously, and I seldom use patterns.  Plus, I think they tend to have some weird, ugly things mixed in with the good stuff.  And yet, I left the shop today with not one, but TWO quilt kits.

SCORE! Out-of-print Heather Ross!

Yes, some weird novelty prints in there, and ugly blenders.  But what’s that I see in the back…?

SCORE! Out-of-print Heather Ross!

Oh, would you look at that!  Some MORE out-of-print Heather Ross, this time some pink wildflowers, pink and yellow dots, and ANOTHER colorway of the stripes!

SCORE! Out-of-print Heather Ross!

And what do I spy in that second bag?  DOGS!  Blue dogs!  There was another bag with the dogs on orange, but I restrained myself.

Anyways, I don’t look at it as spending money on quilt kits I don’t need.  I look at it as getting more than 4 1/2 yards of out-of-print Heather Ross (nearly 2 yards each of the dogs and the dots) for under $50.  Try scoring that on eBay.

SCORE! Out-of-print Heather Ross!

And, as you can see, I got my camera back.

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Comments (8)
Categories : Fabric
Tags : Heather Ross, Lightning Bugs and Other Mysteries, New England Modern quilt guild, out-of-print

What would you do?

By Liz · Comments (7) · April 4th, 2010

First, as for the yarn… you guys are totally right, and I’m going to send most of it to Susan V for her charity knitting. Hooray!

So, as I was going through my yarn, the kids got curious and asked about it. My husband was telling them that it’s used to make hats and sweaters, and that Mommy once made Daddy a PIRATE sweater! (It’s true – it’s black and has white skull & crossbones on the arms.)  The kids got all excited and asked when I was going to make them a sweater.  And while I’m all done on knitting right now, I informed them that I would, in fact, be making them each a quilt.  I even showed them the pile of fabrics.

The trouble is, now my daughter pitifully asks me a few times a day, “where’s my quiiiiilt?”

So, I guess I’d better get started.  And that’s where I need your help.  Here’s where we’re starting:

Far Far Away FQ Set

I bought this fat quarter bundle of Far Far Away almost a year ago, and knew I would use it for my daughter’s big-girl quilt.  But, of course, I’m stalled with indecision and haven’t yet dared to cut into it.

I’ve got coordinating solids, especially in pinks & purples, to go with it. I’ve got scraps I can pull in.  It will be a twin-sized bed quilt, and I’m leaning towards something with more solid-color space and fewer blocks. Maybe. But what kind of blocks? How many of them? How big? Where do I begin??

What would you do? Any favorites you’ve seen in the blogosphere or on Flickr that you think would be just perfect?  Should I just do straight patchwork squares and be done with it?  Should I do completely different front and back so it’s reversible?  Gah!  That’s the trouble with quilting.  The possibilities are nearly endless.

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Comments (7)
Categories : Quilts
Tags : Far Far Away, Heather Ross, twin size
     

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Wish List

Ideas swirling around in my head that haven't gotten going yet...
  • Modified Bento tutorial from Film in the Fridge
  • Aqua and off-white (and green?)... something
  • Half-hexagons
  • Picnic quilt
  • Citrus (orange, yellow, green, pink?)
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